Free Republic
Browse · Search
News/Activism
Topics · Post Article

Skip to comments.

Put 'Em in a Tree Museum (Quindlen Barf)
Newsweek ^ | 8/23/2004 | Anna Quindlen

Posted on 08/17/2004 3:53:27 PM PDT by GunRunner

Aug. 23 issue - Seeing a bald eagle in one of your trees is like running into a movie star on the street. After years of viewing two-dimensional images, there's a conspicuous shock in encountering the thing in the flesh, looking just like its pictures. Or like the back of a quarter. Majestic white head, curved beak, a wingspan to die for: yep, that's the national bird eating one of those trout bought and paid for at the hatchery. It's so thrilling you want to ask for an autograph, perhaps a scrawled "E Pluribus Unum."

advertisement
The slow but sure reappearance of the bald eagle in this part of Pennsylvania is both a tribute to environmentally sound decisions of the past and a cautionary tale of what the future holds. The eagle's disappearance had to do with the presence of the pesticide DDT in native waters, which built up in the birds' bodies and weakened eggshells so perniciously that few chicks were ever hatched.

The bald eagle was named an endangered species, DDT was banned in 1972, and little by little the eagle began to reappear. But whether the national bird, which is by nature skittish, can continue to thrive may hinge on one of the greatest crises facing America at the beginning of the century: its unending, unthinking and environmentally blind overdevelopment and all the mess that goes with it.

In the area surrounding the tree where the eagle perched and polished off his dinner, new homes are being built at an astonishing rate for city dwellers seeking peace and quiet.

(Excerpt) Read more at msnbc.msn.com ...


TOPICS: Business/Economy; Culture/Society
KEYWORDS: baldeagle; barf; conservation; environment
I can't believe that people can still credibly get away with bashing DDT. Rachel Carson totally took the bird of prey research out of context when she wrote Silent Spring; she hated it because it saved people's lives in third world country, totally going against the population control cultism in the environmental movement.

I understand that Quindlen isn't exactly all that bright, but the "DDT is evil" mantra is just as annoying as the "we went into Iraq alone" garbage.

1 posted on 08/17/2004 3:53:33 PM PDT by GunRunner
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | View Replies]

To: GunRunner

"Seeing a bald eagle in one of your trees is like running into a movie star on the street."

Yeah, well I don't want to shoot a bald eagle.


2 posted on 08/17/2004 3:55:00 PM PDT by Mike1973
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies]

To: GunRunner

YEP....DDT is what prevents MALARIA in 3rd world countries, just like fertilizers and bug killers make food easier to provide......SHEESH......now I'm all for reducing the use of pesticides, etc....when necessary, and possible, but until then....they SAVE lives....


3 posted on 08/17/2004 3:56:53 PM PDT by goodnesswins (VICTORY...........brings peace.)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies]

To: Mike1973

ROFL....!!!


4 posted on 08/17/2004 3:57:26 PM PDT by goodnesswins (VICTORY...........brings peace.)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 2 | View Replies]

To: Mike1973

no, but may be as fun as running over a movie star with my
car.


5 posted on 08/17/2004 4:08:22 PM PDT by Rakkasan1 (Justice of the Piece:Kerry/Edwards...so full of crap they need two Johns.)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 2 | View Replies]

To: Mike1973

"Yeah, well I don't want to shoot a bald eagle"

THAT'S BRILLIANT!!!


6 posted on 08/17/2004 4:13:22 PM PDT by UltraKonservativen (( YOU CAN'T FIX STUPID ))
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 2 | View Replies]

Comment #7 Removed by Moderator

To: GunRunner
I have lived on the banks of a river since 1975. Since 1975, we have had multiple pairs of bald eagles every year, raising young. We have watched them every summer as the parents take the young flying/hunting. Every winter you can see their large, messy, unmistakable nests in the trees.

Rachel Carson was used by Anthroposophist (Esoteric Christian Hermeticism...searchable) Marjorie Spock (sister of the baby doctor). The Anthroposophists were upset that pesticide was being sprayed on their biodynamic gardens (search Biodynamics...it is a hoot...in fact, do a search for organic gardening and you will find it dates back to a French follower of Steiner, the guru of Anthroposophy, in the 1920s and is esoteric, not scientific, in origin). Marjorie and others had heard of Carson, who was having trouble getting her work published. It was all about stopping the evil DDT from contaminating the spiritually pure Anthoposophic gardens.

http://www.ecotopia.org/about/earthday2000.html

"It was Rachel Carson who continued the fight on a much larger basis when she sang the Ballad of Cock Robin in Silent Spring and bemoaned the effect of DDT on robin populations. It was the wakeup call that lead to Earth Day. In reading a biography of Rachel Carson last summer I was stunned to find out that Biodynamic gardening was associated with the origin of Carson's interest in DDT. Marjorie Spock, Dr. Spock's sister, had gone to study biodynamic gardening in Dornach at the Steiner Goetheanum and came back and started a biodynamic garden with Mary (Polly) Richards, at Brookville, Long Island. The year was l957. Because of lots of mosquitoes that season, the authorities started aerial spraying DDT over the area, sometimes as often as l4 times a day, including their biodynamic garden. And Marjorie called Rachel."
8 posted on 08/17/2004 4:25:41 PM PDT by reformedliberal (Proud Bush-Cheney04 volunteer)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies]

Comment #9 Removed by Moderator

To: GunRunner

I agree the evidence against DDT is suspect and there are huge public opinion issues (mostly formed by the ads that were on TV when I was growing up showing how it 'weakened' eggs of birds).
Anyway...I found a very nice editorial from the British Medical Journal from 2000 that is relevant today.
rather long, but you may be interested in reading it...

http://bmj.bmjjournals.com/cgi/content/full/321/7273/1403


Doctoring malaria, badly: the global campaign to ban DDT

The treaty on persistent organic pollutantsPOPswill be finalised at the United Nations Environment Programme meeting in Johannesburg, 4-9 December. One proposal is to ban DDT, still used by many countries for controlling the mosquitoes that spread malaria. It should not be banned, argue Amir Attaran and Rajendra Maharaj, specialists in malariology and also international development and lawthere's no evidence that spraying with DDT harms anyone. The issue is not straightforward, says Richard Liroff, director of the World Wildlife Fund's alternatives to DDT project; the treaty raises a series of equity challenges.









DDT for malaria control should not be banned
Amir Attaran, director, international health research, a Rajendra Maharaj, deputy director, vector-borne diseases. b

a Center for International Development, Harvard University, Cambridge, MA 02138, USA, b South Africa Department of Health, Communicable Disease Control, Private Bag X828, Pretoria 0001, South Africa

Correspondence to: A Attaran amir_attaran@harvard.edu

Last year, deaths from malaria in Africa reached an all time high. Next year they will probably do so again, claiming around a million children. Yet in this deadly upward spiral, political pressure is building at the United Nations Environment Programme to pass a treaty by the end of 2000 to internationally ban or restrict one of the world's best anti-malarial tools.

That tool is, of course, DDTdichlorodiphenyltrichloroethane. The campaign to ban it, joined by 260 environmental groups, reads like a who's who of the environmental movement and includes names such as Greenpeace, Worldwide Fund for Nature (WWF), and (ironically) the Physicians for Social Responsibility. Together, they are "demanding action to eliminate" DDT and its sources.1

This view is stunningly naive. DDT residual house spraying is an inexpensive, highly effective, practice against malaria, and it has been approved by the World Health Organization. In it, trained sprayers apply a small quantity of DDT on the interior walls and eaves of homes in endemic regions. The quantities involved are minimal (2 g/m2) and, unlike agricultural uses which inject tonnes of DDT into the outdoors, indoor house spraying results in little harmful release to the environment. For the amount of DDT used on a cotton field, all the high risk residents of a small country can be protected from malaria.2

Few things compare for drama with an effective DDT spraying programme. In its heyday, DDT was successfully used to eradicate malaria from some nations (United States, Europe) and to lower case rates by over 99% in others (Sri Lanka, India). 3 4 In South Africa it was used to eradicate the two most dangerous species of malaria mosquitoes, Anopheles funestus and A gambiae, from the country. All this saved millions of lives.

So, if DDT can be this successful, why ban it? The latest campaign stems from charges that DDT is an "endocrine disrupter" whose ability to cause harm (like Melville's Moby Dick and all excellent monsters since) is both indiscriminate and vast. The World Wildlife Fund and Physicians for Social Responsibility indict DDT chillingly: as a carcinogen, a teratogen, an immunosupressant, and so on. 5 6

All this would be worrisome if it were true. Conspicuously absent behind the campaigners' claims are any epidemiological studies to demonstrate adverse health effects. Although hundreds of millions (and perhaps billions) of people have been exposed to raised concentrations of DDT through occupational or residential exposure from house spraying, the literature has not even one peer reviewed, independently replicated study linking exposure to DDT with any adverse health outcome. Researchers once thought they had discovered a statistically increased risk of breast cancer and attempted to replicate it, but every later published attempt (eight so far) has failed to confirm it.7 Even researchers who find DDT in breast milk and claim it leads to early weaning in children quietly confess a "lack of any detectable effect on children's health."8 Very few other chemicals have been given such extensive scrutiny, and there is still no epidemiological or human toxicological evidence to impugn DDT.9

Environmentalists are easily made tetchy about epidemiology. The authors of Our Stolen Future, a book and website that "explores the emerging science of endocrine disruption," maintain that it is "impossible" to prove the subtle effects of endocrine disrupting pollutants using epidemiology.10 Consequently, they and others argue that animal toxicology and animal data must cause us to ban DDT as a precaution.

Such views cannot be taken seriously. Epidemiology has readily shown the risks of other endocrine disrupting pollutants (such as PCBspolychlorinated biphenyls) even where it finds no risk in DDT.11 And the very notion of "precaution" is churned to nonsense where potential risks to health, known only through animal studies, supposedly justify banning a chemical with known and large human health benefits in malaria control. Indeed, one could say that precaution takes on a very different complexion in sub-Saharan Africa, where 1 in 20 children die of malaria.





(Credit: BETTY PRESS/PANOS PICTURES)

Alternatives to DDT can be more than twice as expensive




Alternatives to DDT house spraying can substitute in some cases but not all cases. Case detection and treatment can help to lower mortality from malaria but can never stop morbidity that does not present in clinic. Insecticide treated bed nets, although promising, will often have the limitation that they protect one or two people under the net and not the entire household. Integrated vector management, an ecological approach against mosquitoes touted by DDT's opponents,6 is as yet only an experimental strategy that has never been used in a national malaria control programme (for the 33 years since 1966, Medline, Biological Abstracts and CAB Abstracts list only 19 references on integrated vector management or control). And while house spraying with alternative insecticides to DDT can work, it is often fraught with insecticide resistance, and costs double or morea real constraint in African countries, where the health ministry's budget may be less than £3 per person.

South Africa illustrates these limitations in practice. Facing pressure from environmentalists, the national malaria control programme abandoned DDT in favour of more expensive pyrethroid insecticides in 1996. Within three years, pyrethroid resistant A funestus mosquitoes invaded KwaZulu-Natal province, where they had not been seen since DDT spraying began in the 1940s. Malaria cases then promptly soared, from just 4117 cases in 1995 to 27 238 cases in 1999 (or possibly 120 000 cases, judging by pharmacy records). Other provinces experienced similar catastrophes, and South Africa was forced to return to DDT spraying this year. It had little alternative: no other insecticide, at any price, was known to be equally effective.

This experience raises a challenging question: if the wealthiest, most scientifically advanced, and least malarious major country of sub-Saharan Africa cannot make do without DDT, how can superendemic and impoverished countries like Tanzania, Congo, or Mozambique do so? Should they be asked to?

We conclude that the public health benefits of DDT amply outweigh its health risksif, indeed, such risks exist at all. For doctors or their banner groups such as Physicians for Social Responsibility to campaign otherwise is not only wrong but outrageously unethical. Risk-benefit trade-offs are part of public health and medicine, and we would be swift to condemn the malpractice of doctors who would from ideology deny their patients cyclosporin, tamoxifen, chlorambucil, azathioprine, or any other lifesaving drug known to be a human carcinogen.12 The situation with DDT and malaria is hardly different. The public health malpractice of its avoidance must stop.



Acknowledgments

An open letter of physicians on the DDT issue is available to read and sign at http://www.malaria.org/DDTpage.html. Over 400 signatures have been collected so far.


Footnotes

Competing interests: None declared.


References
1. International POPs Elimination Network. Background statement and POPs elimination platform. www.ipen.org/pops_platform.htm (accessed 17 Nov 2000).
2. Roberts DR, Laughlin LL, Hsheih P, Legters LJ. DDT, global strategies and a malaria control crisis in South America. Emerg Infect Dis 1997; 3: 295-302[Medline].
3. World Health Organization. The gradual phasing out of DDT for public health purposes. In: Geneva: WHO, 1999. (SDE/PHE/DP/02.)
4. Gramiccia G, Beales PF. The recent history of malaria control and eradication. In: Wernsdorfer WH, McGregor I, eds. Malaria: principles and practice of malariology. New York: Churchill Livingstone, 1988.
5. Physicians for Social Responsibility. The modern malaria control handbook. Washington, DC: PSR, 1999.
6. World Wildlife Fund. Resolving the DDT dilemma. Toronto: WWF, 1998.
7. Gladen BC, Rogan WJ. DDE and shortened duration of lactation in a northern Mexican town. Am J Public Health 1995; 85: 504-508[Abstract].
8. Attaran A, Roberts D, Curtis C, Kilama W. Balancing risks on the backs of the poor. Nature Med 2000; 6: 729-731[CrossRef][Medline].
9. Smith AG. How toxic is DDT? Lancet 2000; 356: 267-268[CrossRef][Medline].
10. Colborn T, Dumanoski D, Myers JP. Our stolen future. www.ourstolenfuture.org (accessed 17 Nov 2000).
11. Rothman N, Cantor KP, Blair A, Bush D, Brock JW, Zahm SH, et al. A nested case-control study of non-Hodgkin lymphoma and serum organochlorine residues. Lancet 1997; 350: 240-244[CrossRef][Medline].
12. WHO International Agency for Research on Cancer. www.iarc.fr (accessed 17 Nov 2000).







Commentary: Reduction and elimination of DDT should proceed slowly
Richard Liroff, director, alternatives to malaria project.

World Wildlife Fund-US, 1250 24th Street NW, Washington, DC 20037, USA

rich.liroff@wwfus.org

DDT (dichlorodiphenyltrichloroethane) is a prominent element in current negotiations of an international treaty to phase out persistent organic pollutants. Malaria specialists have expressed concern that the treaty will prematurely outlaw DDT for malaria control. This will not happen, nor was it ever likely despite exaggerated fears to the contrary. This comment describes the current situation and the rationale for phasing out DDT.

Malaria affects more than 300 million people, and every year it kills more than one million people. An estimated two dozen countries still find DDT effective for malaria control, so DDT's elimination should be done cautiously. A broad consensus exists about how it should be phased out. The treaty language being discussed at the final negotiating session on persistent organic pollutants in South Africa in December 2000 allows for continued use; it calls for expedited development of alternative approaches and promotes periodic evaluation of the status of alternatives and of individual countries' need for DDT.1

DDT is a persistent, bioaccumulative, hormone disrupting chemical. It is associated in the public's mind with weakened eggshells and declining bird populations. But the latest push to phase it out is motivated in large measure by concerns about human health arising from research on DDT in wildlife and laboratory animals. The US National Academy of Sciences' 1999 report on endocrine disrupting chemicals cites studies reporting DDT's adverse impact on the immune and reproductive systems of test animals.2 The "toxicological profile" of DDT and DDE (dichlorodiphenyltrichloroethylene) compiled by the US Agency for Toxic Substances and Disease Registry recites a long list of these chemicals' hormone disrupting impacts in wildlife and laboratory animals. These include impacts on immune, reproductive, and nervous systems. The agency notes that such studies "raise concerns that exposure to DDT early in life might cause harmful effects that remain or begin long after exposure has stopped."3 It also observes that "key endocrine processes can be profoundly affected by exposure to extremely small amounts of active chemicals during critical windows of embryonic, fetal, and neonatal development."

DDT or its metabolites have been found in human breast milk and in amniotic fluid.4 Researchers recently found that raised concentrations of DDE in the serum of human mothers are associated with increased risk of preterm delivery, small for gestational age birth weight, and reduced height of children at age 7.5 Two studies, one in North Carolina and a replication in Mexico, associate raised concentrations of DDE in human mothers with early weaning.6-8

DDT is sprayed inside homes, where it may pose a particular risk to humans. Researchers in Mexico and South Africa found raised concentrations of DDT in people who lived where it was used to control malaria, and they estimated that breastfed children in those areas were being dosed at levels exceeding those recommended by the World Health Organization and the Food and Agricultural Organization. 9 10 These findings contributed to both countries' substituting alternative methods of control.

The draft treaty on persistent organic pollutants is fully consistent with changes in malaria control strategies promoted by the WHO. Over the past 30 years the WHO has backed away from its once enthusiastic support for DDT. The Pan American Health Organization, WHO's affiliate in Latin America, recently expressed strong reservations about the effectiveness of broadscale application of DDT for malaria control.11 Its recent study illustrates the reason for this concern: it shows that during the late 1980s and early 1990s, malaria rates in Brazil went up even as spraying of houses with DDT increased, but rates dropped after Brazil shifted to alternative control methods.12

Many alternatives to DDT have already been successfully used for controlling malaria. Mexico, for example, committed itself to ending use of DDT by 2007, provided that suitable alternatives are available. Relying on a range of effective and affordable chemical and non-chemical strategies, Mexico has been so successful that its DDT manufacturing plant has ceased production owing to lack of demand. The director of Mexico's malaria control programme, Jorge Mendez, has even declared that it is 25% cheaper for Mexico to spray a house with other chemicalssynthetic pyrethroidsthan with DDT.13 Similar success stories of effective programmes not based on DDT can be found around the globe. 14 15

The cautious approach being adopted in the treaty reflects uncertainty about how many countries that are still using DDT can successfully move from it. South Africa illustrates the dilemma. South Africa stopped spraying DDT out of concern for its hazard to human health. But one of the mosquito vectors of malaria proved resistant to synthetic pyrethroid sprays, so South Africa has resumed using DDT. South Africa made the difficult choice that the developmental risks from spraying with DDT are outweighed by the need to provide protection from malaria.

The treaty on persistent organic pollutants raises a series of equity challenges that must be addressed directly. Firstly, the countries still relying on DDT include some of the poorest in the world. These countries must have financial and technical assistance from the developed world to strengthen their ability to control malaria. The feasibility and cost of shifting from DDT must be assessed and requisite investments made. The WHO's action plan for reducing reliance on DDT calls for such assessments and capacity building activities.

Secondly, the interests of those countries for which alternatives are not available must also be protected. Only two countries still produce DDTIndia and China. India's malaria control programme, with support from the World Bank, expects to reduce its use of DDT. Concomitant with increased investments in researching and implementing alternatives to DDT, steps must be taken to assure that DDT remains available at an affordable price to those countries that truly need it. Such supplies would need to be carefully distributed and monitored, to prevent diversion of DDT to illegal agricultural uses.

The executive director of the United Nations Environment Programme, Klaus Toepfer, and the first director of WHO's Roll Back Malaria programme, David Nabarro, have stated that a properly constructed phase out of DDT can produce a "win-win" situation for environmental health. 16 17 Malaria imposes a horrendous social and economic burden totalling billions of dollars. The treaty on persistent organic pollutants can mobilise fresh financial and technical resources to help achieve protection from both malaria and DDT.



Footnotes

Competing interests: None declared.


References
1. United Nations Environment Programme. Report of the Intergovernmental Negotiating Committee for an International Legally Binding Instrument for Implementing International Action on Certain Persistent Organic Pollutants on the work of its fourth session. Geneva: UNEP, 2000. (UNEP/POPS/INC.4/5.)
2. Committee on Hormonally Active Agents in the Environment, Board on Environmental Studies and Toxicology, National Research Council. Hormonally active agents in the environment. Washington, DC: National Academy Press, 1999.
3. Agency for Toxic Substances and Disease Registry, US Department of Health and Human Services. Toxicological profile for DDT/DDD/DDE (update): draft for public comment. Atlanta: Agency for Toxic Substances and Disease Registry, 2000.
4. Foster W, Chan S, Platt L, Hughes C. Detection of endocrine disrupting chemicals in samples of second trimester human amniotic fluid. J Clin Endocrinol Metab 2000; 85: 2954-2957[Abstract/Free Full Text].
5. Longnecker MP, Klebanoff MA, Brock JA, Zhou H. DDE is associated with increased risk of preterm delivery and small-for-gestational-age birthweight in humans. Organohalogen Compounds 2000; 48: 161-162.
6. Rogan WJ, Gladen BC, McKinney JD, Carreras N, Hardy P, Thullen J, et al. Polychlorinated biphenyls (PCBs) and dichlorodiphenyl dichloroethene (DDE) in human milk: effects on growth, morbidity, and duration of lactation. Am J Public Health 1987; 77: 1294-1297[Abstract].
7. Gladen BC, Rogan WJ. DDE and shortened duration of lactation in a northern Mexican town. Am J Public Health 1995; 85: 504-508[Abstract].
8. Rogan WJ. The DDT question [letter]. Lancet 2000; 356: 1189[CrossRef][Medline].
9. Waliszewski SM, Pardio Sedas VT, Chantiri JN, Infanzon RM, Rivera J. Organochlorine pesticide residues in human breast milk from tropical areas in Mexico. Bull Environ Contam Toxicol 1996; 57: 22-28[CrossRef][Medline].
10. Bouwman H. Malaria control and the paradox of DDT. AfricaEnvironment and Wildlife 2000; 8: 54-56.
11. 41st Directing Council, Pan American Health Organization. Report on the status of malaria programs in the Americas (based on 1998 data). Washington, DC: PAHO, 1999. (CD41/INF/1 (Eng).)
12. Gusmao R. The control of malaria in Brazil. International workshop on the contextual determinants of malaria, Lausanne, Switzerland, May 2000.
13. Mendez J. Remarks at World Health Organization DDT briefing, POPs INC-4, Bonn, Germany, 19 March 2000.
14. Matteson P, ed. Disease vector management for public health and conservation. In: Washington, DC: World Wildlife Fund, 1999.
15. Roll Back Malaria Project. Potential for progress: inspiring reports from around the world. Geneva: World Health Organization, 2000.
16. United Nations Environment Programme. Elimination of 10 intentionally produced persistent organic pollutants favoured by treaty negotiators; health need for DDT exemption seen. In: Nairobi/Geneva: UNEP, 1999. (Press release NR99/102; 13 September.)
17. World Health Organization. WHO argues balanced position to DDT. Geneva: WHO, 1999. (Note for the Press No 20; 10 September.)



10 posted on 08/17/2004 4:43:00 PM PDT by flixxx
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies]

To: GunRunner

Baldies stalk my chickens. They are all around here.


11 posted on 08/17/2004 4:46:52 PM PDT by mlmr (Find a ring and put it round, round, round And with ties so strong your two hearts are bound...)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies]

To: mlmr

I live in a City on the north shore of Long Island and about two weeks ago a young male made one of the Church steeples his spot. They certainly are majestic. He's here in the middle of town, amongst 45,000 people and they are worried the Eagle won't survive? Look around, there is more possible food for this guy here than in the woods... Rats, pidgeons, squirrels.


12 posted on 08/17/2004 5:45:50 PM PDT by NYCop (Bush, the right choice for real men)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 11 | View Replies]

To: NYCop

I wonder whether they are off the endangered list.


13 posted on 08/17/2004 6:03:08 PM PDT by mlmr (Find a ring and put it round, round, round And with ties so strong your two hearts are bound...)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 12 | View Replies]

Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.

Free Republic
Browse · Search
News/Activism
Topics · Post Article

FreeRepublic, LLC, PO BOX 9771, FRESNO, CA 93794
FreeRepublic.com is powered by software copyright 2000-2008 John Robinson